TheMeInTeam
If A implies B...
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2008
- Messages
- 27,995
Now we can state something a little bit different about the GRE, IIRC Owen and Azale both have some horror stories about what they experienced in the "reading" section of it. My experience with the "reading" section of the GRE didn't actually seem to do anything but ask vocabulary questions and finding antonyms and synonyms. While I feel this can be useful, this turns the GRE into nothing more than an "important" bar trivia contest.
It's probably a botched attempt at one's ability to comprehend the intention of writing in context in some cases. When I was still doing it I used to see a lot of questions with regard to the motivations/intentions of characters in a paragraph or two, or questions as to how they likely felt. I know they've changed the structure a few times though so maybe it's different now.
It's why I said quality is crucial to these tests if used in this capacity, and yet it also makes one question the quality of non-standard tests given in schools on any given week where students receive grades and progress based on the outcome, as in my experience the latter isn't any better.
Yeah, but this doesn't work, does it?
They're looking at standardized test performance and not any sort of increase in the quality of education. It seems that the quality is decreasing, even.
You do need a test that requires some degree of quality education in order to perform well on it, yes. If it's not designed in a way that can reliably assess student knowledge and capability to at least some extent, however, the problem lies squarely with the test.
You will never pass a CPA or Medical Board exam and gain a license by accident. You can't do it, you have to have substantial knowledge of the relevant discipline far beyond what a lay person has to be capable of passing them...and if you do pass them your knowledge (and for CPAs, ability) is sufficient to at least be competent in the field (medicine has a practical element also of course that gets tested extensively in addition). I assert that standardized testing is lacking in quality and standards, not in concept.